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Vitamin A Can Reduce Complications From
Malaria In Children
- Title
- Effect of vitamin A supplementation on morbidity due to Plasmodium
falciparum in young children in Papua New Guinea: a randomised trial.
- Author
- Shankar AH; Genton B; Semba RD; Baisor M; Paino J; Tamja S; Adiguma T; Wu L; Rare L;
Tielsch JM; Alpers MP; West KP Jr
- Address
- Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health,
Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA. ashankar@jhsph.edu
- Source
- Lancet, 354(9174):203-9 1999 Jul 17
- Abstract
- BACKGROUND: Many individuals at risk of malaria also have micronutrient deficiencies
that may hamper protective immunity. Vitamin A is central to normal immune
function, and supplementation has been shown to lower the morbidity of some infectious
diseases. We investigated the effect of vitamin A supplementation on malaria
morbidity. METHODS: This randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial of vitamin
A supplementation took place in a P. falciparum endemic area of Papua New Guinea. Of 520
potentially eligible children aged 6-60 months, 480 were randomly assigned high-dose vitamin
A (n=239) or placebo (n=241), every 3 months for 13 months. Malaria morbidity was assessed
through weekly community-based case detection and surveillance of patients who
self-reported to the health centre. Cross-sectional surveys were also done at the
beginning, middle, and end of the study to assess malariometric indicators. Analyses were
by intention to treat. FINDINGS: The number of P. falciparum febrile episodes (temperature
> or = 37.5 degrees C with a parasite count of at least 8000/microL) was 30% lower in
the vitamin A group than in the placebo group (178 vs 249 episodes; relative
risk 0.70 [95% CI 0.57-0.87], p=0.0013). At the end of the study P. falciparum geometric
mean density was lower in the vitamin A than the placebo group (1300
[907-1863] vs 2039 [1408-2951]) as was the proportion with spleen enlargement (125/196
[64%] vs 148/207 [71%]); neither difference was significant (p=0.093 and p=0.075).
Children aged 12-36 months benefited most, having 35% fewer febrile episodes (89 vs 141;
relative risk 0.65 [14-50], p=0.0023), 26% fewer enlarged spleens (46/79 [58%] vs 67/90
[74%], p=0.0045), and a 68% lower parasite density (1160 [95% CI 665-2022] vs 3569
[2080-6124], p=0.0054). Vitamin A had no consistent effect on
cross-sectional indices of proportion infected or with anaemia. INTERPRETATION: Vitamin
A supplementation may be an effective low-cost strategy to lower morbidity due to P.
falciparum in young children. The findings suggest that clinical episodes, spleen
enlargement, and parasite density are influenced by different immunological mechanisms
from infection and anaemia.
- Language
- Eng
- Unique Identifier
- 99347670
- MESH Headings
- Child, Preschool ; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ; Double-Blind Method ; Female ;
Human ; Infant ; Malaria, Falciparum EP/IM/MO/*PC ; Male ; New Guinea EP ; Population
Surveillance ; Prevalence ; Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S. ;
Survival Analysis ; Vitamin A BL/*TU ; Vitamin A Deficiency
*IM
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